Some things never change

When Mark Koepp started farming in the 1980s, he joined 16,000 other pig farmers in Minnesota. Today, about a quarter are left. Fewer people are staying on the family farm, and the farms are getting bigger. Technology and improved methods have made crop yields skyrocket. But some things never change. Farmers can always count on…

The new guard: Effects of administrative turnover

Since Eric Kaler began his presidency at the University of Minnesota in 2011, all but four administrators on his 18-person senior leadership team have left their old posts. It’s an unspoken rule in higher education that when a new president comes in, key administrators offer their resignation so the new leader has the opportunity to…

Wide health gaps tied to race

Before she reaches her first birthday, a black child in Minnesota is more than twice as likely to die as a white child. An American Indian high school student is twice as likely to have suicidal thoughts as his white classmate. And Hispanic Minnesotans are three times as likely to be uninsured as their white…

The only woman in the room

Rachel Levine is torn. In a few years, she’ll receive her doctorate in chemical engineering from the University of Minnesota and face the same decision as tens of thousands of science, technology, engineering and math graduate students across the nation: industry or academia? As a professor, Levine would be able to conduct research she cares…